You've Probably Never Had Real Thai Tea!

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 923

  • @PailinsKitchen
    @PailinsKitchen  Год назад +128

    Hey everyone! The full recipe is here hot-thai-kitchen.com/thai-iced-tea/
    The post above also has additional info, so if you have further questions, please read the blog post first and see if your question is answered there. If not, leave your question on the website comments! Questions in RUclips comments may not be seen due to large volume. Thank you 🙏🏼

    • @artistlovepeace
      @artistlovepeace Год назад +1

      I'm pretty sure I have.

    • @theboringchannel2027
      @theboringchannel2027 Год назад +2

      Black tea has a natural RED color, not orange.
      In China, black tea is called RED tea.

    • @rubenssz
      @rubenssz Год назад +1

      Just a tip, any foreigner won't be able to understand those measures, we use grams and milliliters. I really don't know how much tea powder and how much water was added

    • @theboringchannel2027
      @theboringchannel2027 Год назад +3

      @@rubenssz water is given in grams
      teaspoon is 5ml tablespoon is 15ml

    • @dawnjackson6741
      @dawnjackson6741 10 месяцев назад

      How much sugar 3 tablespoon or 4?

  • @katiirabbi
    @katiirabbi Год назад +1013

    Classic thai iced tea used to be my favorite, until I discovered thai green tea, where the tea base is changed to a jasmine green tea. The floral notes are sublime with the condensed milk!!

    • @sayajinmamuang
      @sayajinmamuang Год назад +20

      Had thai iced green tea with milk at a thai restaurant specializing in isan food. Not sure if it was the restaurant or the brand they were using but totally tasted disgusting and not like any normal general green tea you would find in most Asian food places. I gave it one sip and i was like wth is this. It had the floral notes as you mentioned but tasted very much chemical induced as well and not very natural tasting. I very much prefer Chinese or Japanese green teas over this.

    • @lowwastehighmelanin
      @lowwastehighmelanin Год назад +3

      Wait...that sounds amazing. I want to drink it!

    • @lowwastehighmelanin
      @lowwastehighmelanin Год назад +34

      @@sayajinmamuangtea is easy to burn. Maybe it was burnt. Jasmine green tea is extremely pleasant and mellow usually. I'm sorry yours was not good. 😢

    • @sayajinmamuang
      @sayajinmamuang Год назад +7

      @lowwastehighmelanin oh I know I've tasted jasmine green tea in many Chinese Japanese and Korean restaurants and food places. I think more the problem was that it tasted more like a chemical mixture rather then a natural green tea taste. But i see what your saying thanks anyways

    • @user_anonymouse
      @user_anonymouse Год назад +2

      Agree! Thai gree tea is so amazing when I discovered it in Thailand

  • @successivedestinies7215
    @successivedestinies7215 Год назад +203

    2 Very kind women from Thailand used to make this daily for me for 2 years straight. They would sometimes add some coconut milk. Fricking delicious! Unfortunately, 1 year ago, their Hawaiian shop closed and they disappeared, but I'm still addicted. Thai tea....all day....everyday ❤. Mahalo so much for your time and effort.

    • @CyberMachine
      @CyberMachine Год назад +2

      I think the American way is more coconut milk than half and half.

    • @successivedestinies7215
      @successivedestinies7215 11 месяцев назад +2

      That may be so. Not sure of the origin of adding other things. It was only sometimes that they'd add coconut milk just for extra flavor, and that idea came from one of the younger daughters. Most times, it was authentic. Still fricking delicious, though 😋

  • @SuperMeat83
    @SuperMeat83 Год назад +1702

    I just watched Uncle Roger's reviews for dollar store Pad Thai. He said your channel is where to go to learn Thai cooking. I totally agree. ❤

    • @nickm.5931
      @nickm.5931 Год назад +83

      Uncle Roger is also mistaken for some authority on everything-authentic Asian cuisine (I mean cmon, why should people assume someone thoroughly knows not simply one country [like Chinese, Korean, Japanese,...] food, but *all* Asian food?)...

    • @TerraBuns
      @TerraBuns Год назад +96

      @@nickm.5931 I have the same thoughts!! Also, he’s a comedian, not a cook. That doesn’t mean he doesn’t know anything, but it’s weird that people treat him as the be-all end-all on which food is authentic or not.

    • @doveflyer1636
      @doveflyer1636 Год назад +5

      I want to find a version that tastes the same without dye

    • @lichee12
      @lichee12 Год назад +9

      @@doveflyer1636 Not sure how to put this but she mentioned even the authentic version has dye and artificial vanilla. So you're asking for a fake version of the authentic version that's actually more pure? I dont disagree with you but any version other than the authentic is going to be a knock-off, isnt it? Knock-offs generally dont taste as good as the original.

    • @Dparrey
      @Dparrey Год назад +21

      ​@@nickm.5931uncle Roger isn't even a real person. He can't hurt you. So I wouldn't take everything seriously

  • @TheWhiteDragon3
    @TheWhiteDragon3 Год назад +363

    I just got a job in a cafe run by a Thai couple, and we combine methods. We have a pitcher of Thai Tea with sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk added, and we serve it to the customer with half and half floated on top. Extra, extra rich and indulgent.

  • @marcwright4790
    @marcwright4790 Год назад +136

    As you were adding the orange food coloring I was thinking this would be a good “fall” beverage for Americans in the south where it doesn’t cool down until December, if ever. Forget pumpkin spice lattes! Make Thai ice tea the south’s official fall drink!

    • @cassaleelee
      @cassaleelee 11 месяцев назад +10

      We do love iced tea and also sweetened condensed milk. Could work!

  • @GothVampiress
    @GothVampiress Год назад +115

    i always keep sweetened condensed milk at home to add to hot drinks. i started doing it for viet style iced coffee, but it makes sense that's what makes thai tea so good, too! the hispanic grocery stores where i live tend to keep it in squeeze bottles, which i much prefer so i don't have to deal with a whole can just for a single cup.

    • @godowskygodowsky1155
      @godowskygodowsky1155 Год назад +7

      You can also dip bread in it.

    • @StarWizardGanymede
      @StarWizardGanymede 3 месяца назад

      Omg I need a squeeze bottle so I can have REAL Thai iced tea for breakfast!

    • @TechieTard
      @TechieTard 2 месяца назад

      The Hispanic condensed milk you're referring to is called La Lechera. Very convenient to use.

  • @chanjoyces
    @chanjoyces 9 месяцев назад +8

    REALLY appreciate how you present information and clarify between Thai-born LOL recipes and Thai-American recipes. Kindly (but firmly!) re-educating us and paying respect to the cuisine, country, and food pathways. Meanwhile sliding in the Thai-thai Lime Tea at the end - which sounds amazing. I've learned something more than what I came to this video for - want to know more of the real deal! 🍋

  • @shank.7590
    @shank.7590 Год назад +98

    Thai Tea + Oat milk is a good combination too, the creamy texture and thickness are just about right!

    • @maysarah1613
      @maysarah1613 9 месяцев назад +1

      That’s so true!😊

    • @miaomiaochan
      @miaomiaochan 5 месяцев назад +1

      And it won't make me feel bloated from the lactose. I'm going to have to try this as well.

    • @redstarwarrior85
      @redstarwarrior85 4 месяца назад

      I use vanilla oat creamer instead to get more richness and creaminess.

  • @thecrawf17
    @thecrawf17 Год назад +9

    My wife and I both prefer the lime thai tea as well, thanks for the mention as it is almost never found here in North America

  • @amrutaponkshe
    @amrutaponkshe Год назад +62

    Of course I'm going to try it today with whatever I can find at home. As an Indian and a chai lover, I absolutely love Thai Iced tea here in the US. I knew from the color that there would be some food coloring, but the Vanilla flavoring was eye opening! Thanks Pailin for your videos

  • @johnfornarola0087
    @johnfornarola0087 Год назад +18

    I'm happy to find out that the Thai Iced Tea we made in a Thai restaurant in North Carolina was the real deal. That's precisely how we made it.

  • @sarahleiby6944
    @sarahleiby6944 Год назад +130

    The condensed milk is sooooooo essential to that caramelized addicting flavor! Even in the US, I'll never settle for half and half in my thai tea it's just not the same. I live in a small town in Colorado but we're lucky to have a Thai restaurant in town that makes it the right way!! Now I want to try myself:)

    • @samramirez2067
      @samramirez2067 Месяц назад

      Omg do you live near Brighton?! I loveeee the thai tea at TJ Pho

  • @gyoumans2901
    @gyoumans2901 Год назад +22

    I prefer evaporated milk in any tea or coffee, I found out by accident when I had leftovers and didn't know what to use it in lol Thank you for sharing.

    • @delirium129
      @delirium129 Год назад

      Same here! For many years, I drank my coffee and tea with evaporated milk, exclusively. Until I realized fairly recently (after going through stomach issues every day) that I'm lactose-intolerant. So I've switched to oat milk. It's not the same, though, not as creamy, and I don't think it'd work for Thai tea. Although apparently sweetened condensed oat milk (and evaporated oat milk!?) is a thing...

  • @facemymusic
    @facemymusic Год назад +5

    I’ve been searching for a deep dive into Thai tea like this for what feels months bc I’ve become obsessed with the flavor, but nothing hit the mark. Thank you!!

  • @nailily
    @nailily Год назад +10

    Yup, I use sugar and vanilla to get the flavor along with Assam tea leaves. I found using oat milk works really well. I have all the ingredients in my pantry so I don't bother with the packaged ones found here or in the grocery stores.

  • @PursuingHeaven
    @PursuingHeaven 6 месяцев назад +61

    this is the recipe I have always used
    4 cups (960 ml) water
    4 organic black tea bags
    3/4 cup (150 g) granulated sugar
    1 tsp vanila
    2 anise stars
    1 green cardamom pod , smashed
    2 whole cloves

    • @AntiAntiAntiFa
      @AntiAntiAntiFa 5 месяцев назад +3

      Do you mean 2 complete stars, or 2 "arms" from one star?

    • @abididubidi7815
      @abididubidi7815 5 месяцев назад +3

      Personally, i would use just one star at most. Otherwise the ani​se flavour gets way too overpowering @@AntiAntiAntiFa

    • @AntiAntiAntiFa
      @AntiAntiAntiFa 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@abididubidi7815 I agree, and I would use a little more cardamom than anise.
      But just adding vanilla to black tea already gives you a lot of Thai tea flavor. I'm going to try adding vanilla to several kinds of chai.

    • @fahmeidahaffejee9004
      @fahmeidahaffejee9004 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@AntiAntiAntiFa those arms are called " petals"

    • @StarWizardGanymede
      @StarWizardGanymede 3 месяца назад

      ​@AntiAntiAntiFa It’s probably worth the time to try this recipe with multiple dark teas as well. Earl Grey? Rooibos? Oolong? So many good tea types that could make the recipe shine. For those who want it absurdly strong, replace plain black with Earl Grey.
      You know? I just feel like this recipe isn't using the right tea type. For all we know, it could be excellent in orange pekoe.

  • @WillKlein
    @WillKlein Год назад +69

    Today I went to a new local authentic Thai restaurant and tried their Thai tea. I actually found them because I was searching for Thai tea and accidentally did it in Google Maps. Happy accident, because they were just a mile from my house and also have Thai tea. Funny you mention the lime in the tea, because they made a special tea, butterfly pea flower tea, which I they added lime to and it was really great! They also made mine with oat milk and I was surprised how well it worked compared to classic dairy. Oh my gosh though, I’m so happy you shared this with us. I need to try making it for myself (part Thai) and more importantly, my wife who loves it even more. 🙏🏽

  • @beatricebhq2961
    @beatricebhq2961 Год назад +5

    I bought a tea sock and ChaTraMue tea in Thailand and I make my tea with condensed and evaporated milk, I don't add sugar. I have been siping one today 😊
    Thanks from France

  • @totalbliss1
    @totalbliss1 Год назад +13

    I have to say I've tried both versions many times and I've come to prefer a hybrid of both. I make a "milk sauce" mixing half&half and condensed milk together and pour that over the Thai tea omitting the extra sugar at the end.
    I prefer half&half over evaporated milk due to it being more richer but the best in taste, which I've had in some fine Thai restaurants, is heavy cream that's been sweetened by condensed milk. I've asked them point blank what they use and they told me heavy cream. That just makes the tea amazing...but no so healthy for regular drinking.

  • @Rodaportal
    @Rodaportal Год назад +42

    Thai tea is a symphony of flavors - a dance between the earthy Assam tea leaves, the sweetness of condensed milk, and the surprise tang of lime. 🍹 Each sip transports you to vibrant Bangkok streets, where vendors craft this magical elixir. 🌆 I've tried it in various forms, but nothing quite compares to the authenticity of Thai tea made from scratch. 🙌 Now, I'm excited to recreate that experience in my own kitchen, embracing the art of Thai tea-making. Thanks for unraveling the secrets, Pailin! 💖👩‍🍳

  • @m_d_l_a3208
    @m_d_l_a3208 Месяц назад

    I appreciate how thorough you are in your explanations and comparisons.

  • @Peter-cm8vi
    @Peter-cm8vi Год назад +6

    Brings back fond memories of the first time I had this tea in Chiang Mai. Thanks Pai.

  • @whatawittyusername
    @whatawittyusername Год назад +3

    I make dairy free Thai iced tea with the Nut Pods creamer "original". It's a blend of coconut and almond milks. I love it!

  • @雨宮和希
    @雨宮和希 Год назад +46

    Viewer from Taiwan 👋 In my country, it is not common to find evaporated milk in the regular supermarket, it will usually appears in bakery suppliment shop, but only comes in one brand which is Carnation from Nestle. So to make things easier, I usually have a stronger tea base, without adding suger but use condensed milk only to reach the sweetness, then adding more of milk (compared to the traditional Thai style) to finialize it.

    • @triadwarfare
      @triadwarfare Год назад +3

      This is strange since you live in close proximity to SEA nations which use these substitutions a lot. Speaking of which, as a Filipino, we have sub-variants of those, which is "condensada" and "evaporada", where cream is mixed in with the evaporated/condensed milk to make it cheaper and since most of the people making our local desserts would do it anyway (and even add more cream to dilute what's remaining of evap/condensed milk).
      Unfortunately, our economy isn't doing so well and prices had shot up significantly, so it's more than the price of where the original versions where previously, and I think the original versions will no longer sell.

    • @DrowningInTea
      @DrowningInTea 10 месяцев назад

      @@triadwarfare Taiwan doesn't really have a milk tea tradition like Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia and Myanmar so it makes sense that they don't use evaporated milk. Speaking of milk tea, their boba tea base tastes very fake from my POV as a HKer because their tea doesn't use milk but milk powder.

  • @Luvly975
    @Luvly975 5 месяцев назад

    My husband is Thai and I made him this tea and he loved it! Thank you for sharing these great tea recipes. Now that the warmer weather is here, I'll be able to keep this tea on hand to serve to my family whenever they need to cool down. Much love from PA

  • @olivier2553
    @olivier2553 Год назад +7

    When they visited me in Thailand, my parents would always bring back Thai tea to France.
    I like cha nom ron because it has no ice so it has a stronger taste. At 5 am, at the market, with kay luak and pa tonko.

  • @SweeetSpice
    @SweeetSpice 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you! I followed your recipe but I used condensed coconut milk and evaporated coconut milk instead and it’s YUMMY 😋 The coconut flavor isn’t strong at all so it tastes very similar to when you buy it ❤

  • @encro
    @encro Год назад +3

    It's great to see you finally do this video Pai. It's very thorough and helps solidify the information and little nuances of making Thai Thai. I had to learn how to make this using Google Translate to replicate it about 12 years ago.
    I use ⅔ Cup of Police Dog Thai Tea Powder to 1.3 Litres of Thai Tea in the Plunger (French Press). Pour in hot then plunge after 30 minutes extract maximum flavour.
    This brand was the one that tasted most authentic to what I was served everywhere in Thailand. The flavour is great and it has added dye which makes the colour a really nice orange hue and stains your hands while preparing it.
    When I use the Cha Tra Mue Brand, I use only ½ cup as this one turns out too bitter if strong. It also has a more floral taste that I don't like.

  • @etepmaximus5886
    @etepmaximus5886 Год назад +2

    Many years ago, I visited my local Thai grocer. I bought a box of tea leaves with the idea of making iced tea. It said I should use 4 tablespoons of the leaves and it never explained WHY I needed as much. Finally got the answer! Thanks!

  • @TheMaraj
    @TheMaraj Год назад +5

    I’ve known how Thai tea powder is made for years, but always assumed to the artificial vanilla flavor was too different for your hack to work. I’m definitely trying that. Thank you.

  • @BatPotatoes
    @BatPotatoes Год назад +8

    In the US I've always loved the moment you get to stir the American style Thai tea, mixing the light into the dark & seeing all the swirls. I think I would split the difference between American & Thai styles by dissolving white sugar into the hot tea base then topping it with the canned evaporated milk instead of the half & half

  • @eggiesammich
    @eggiesammich Год назад +16

    I still remember my first trip to Bangkok, buying Thai tea made this way from food carts for about $1 every day. Between that and the food, my tastebuds were in heaven 🤤

  • @CriticalTechReviews
    @CriticalTechReviews Год назад +1

    I'm so glad I watched this, I've put a pinch of salt in my coffee before, but never thought to do that with tea!

  • @Prinren
    @Prinren Год назад +3

    PERFECT timing! I just bought a bag of Thai tea a couple of days ago.

  • @Lesliestevens92.1fm
    @Lesliestevens92.1fm 3 месяца назад

    Wow this is the best video I’ve ever seen on RUclips on the subject. Thank you for using a lavalier microphone., and fantastic video/editing. Really made it worthwhile to watch and listen instead of just someone with a phone camera. I learned a lot and usually the American way is the way I usually make this iced tea. It’s just easy to buy a little bit of half-and-half from the store, but either way you did an excellent job and I love it…..! ❤

  • @akarimyomyat4162
    @akarimyomyat4162 Год назад +15

    Debunking videos are always somewhat charming and unique in its own way, and your latest debunking videos look refreshing, knowledgeable while also being entertained. Still getting used to your new style of video editing but really great job, Pai and please create these kinds of videos more & more! ❤

  • @Anchezio
    @Anchezio Год назад +1

    Perfect timing! I just received my Thai tea leaves in the mail today! Can't wait!

  • @yamasaer
    @yamasaer Год назад +11

    This channel made me proud of Thai food :)

  • @saharamcnamara
    @saharamcnamara Месяц назад

    I am doing a volunteer year at a school in Thailand right now. During my second week I discovered Thai Tea and ever since then I can't stop buying it. Every time we go to a café, I buy one Thai Tea to drink there and two to put in the fridge for another day. Sadly, the school is far from anything and I don't often get to go to a café, so I've decided to learn how to do it myself. Thanks for this video ❤

  • @abmong
    @abmong Год назад +3

    Sweetened condensed milk adds a caremel or butterscotch-like flavour to the tea that you don't get will just sugar

  • @Starlight-pi8ln
    @Starlight-pi8ln Год назад

    ชอบชาดำเย็นใส่มะนาวฝาน...I like the sweeten thai tea with no dairy of any kind with a piece of lime.

  • @Apollo440
    @Apollo440 Год назад +15

    They add the food coloring to the tea for good reason:
    You can differentiate good milk tea by its color.
    And it takes just the right amount of condensed milk and just the right strength of tea to get the color and taste right.
    A beautiful orange is what it should be. And if it's pale - it's too weak or dilute. If it's darker - it's just too strong.
    I would do it with additive free tea, playing around with tea steeping times and condensed milk amounts to get the recipe just right.
    And try it hot, it's very nice as well!

  • @AdamKnightAus
    @AdamKnightAus Год назад +1

    I love Thai tea. When I was in Thailand a few weeks back I wasn't sure which to buy. I found this on Amazon and ordered.

  • @rowenafernandez4361
    @rowenafernandez4361 Год назад +4

    I will definitely make this! We love Thai tea. Ordered this at Red ginger. I made your Thai version of dumplings and everyone loves it. I also made the sweet chili sauce and my sister back home( Phil.) wants the recipe, so I sent it. Thank you for sharing! 💜

  • @shysmart8021
    @shysmart8021 Год назад

    At various times over the years I've looked for a good answer on what Thai Tea actually is and have never found a clear answer, and then today the algorithm suggested this video to me. Thank you so much! Especially for the info on various versions, misconceptions, etc.

  • @Jeffffrey0902
    @Jeffffrey0902 Год назад +21

    Have you tried Hong Kong-style lemon tea and milk tea? They're my favourite drinks, and I believe in Vancouver there are a few great cha chaan tengs (Hong Kong-style diners), where you can give them a go, as the Hong Kong community is not exactly small there. I like them unsweetened, but the beauty of HK-style drinks is that you can order them at any sweetness level you like.
    To digress, since Thailand, Taiwan and Hong Kong are all known for their milk tea (and, sadly, political struggles), netizens started to call these places collectively the "Milk Tea Alliance" several years ago.

    • @PailinsKitchen
      @PailinsKitchen  Год назад +2

      Never tried HK style tea, but I just had Taiwan milk tea in Taiwan and it was amazing!! Interesting re: Milk Tea Alliance!

    • @Jeffffrey0902
      @Jeffffrey0902 Год назад

      @@PailinsKitchen Oh you went to Taiwan? It's food heaven! Would you consider teaching us how to cook some famous Taiwanese dishes like beef noodle soup, fried chicken or oyster pancake?

    • @assenav1028
      @assenav1028 Год назад +1

      Use 3 Tetley and 2 Lipton yellow label tea bags, possibly with same amount of hot water, skip the condense milk, add evaporate milk only, preferably black and white label, that’s how I make my HK style milk tea in Australia. You can add sugar or syrup for iced tea, but I like mine unsweetened

    • @steak5599
      @steak5599 Год назад

      @@assenav1028 That's a knock off version of it. I tried that and didn't really work.
      If you want it to taste exactly like what you get from Hong Kong, use Loose Leafs and a Strainer. Normally a HK tea house uses Ceylon leaf (large) and Indian Leaf (fine leaf) mix and pour water from the top of the strainer back and forth 3 times, and then let it sit for 2 minutes inside the water.
      Do it too much or let it sit too long in water the tea come out bitter.

  • @raiyu1985
    @raiyu1985 Год назад +1

    I watched a video years ago on how coffee waste can be used as fertilizer. The Thai tea leaves could be used to make my backyard vegetables greener.

  • @NickCombs
    @NickCombs Год назад +3

    FYI if you're someone looking for a vegan milk and you've landed on oat milk as your choice, oats are one of the foods where buying organic makes a real difference. They tend to absorb a lot of pesticides.

  • @BintAmun
    @BintAmun 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think yellow food coloring makes it more orangey, but since they’re both bad for you - there’s a version you can buy made with annatto for coloring. Great recipe, love the info :)

  • @MrsBrit1
    @MrsBrit1 Год назад +134

    The can opening trick isn't a Thai thing. It's just the right thing! My grandparents always kept evaporated milk and they used a traditional old can punch to open it and you're supposed to punch open both sides for an easy pour! Apparently Thai vendors have kept the know-how!

    • @maxcleveland3446
      @maxcleveland3446 Год назад +3

      My grandmother used an awl to hole her can of armored cow.

    • @ae2948
      @ae2948 Год назад +8

      We did similar with canned juices. One hole made with a triangle punch to pour with. Another sometimes smaller hole on the opposite side to let the air in for easier pouring.

    • @cherub73au
      @cherub73au Год назад +2

      Same in Sri Lanka with our nestle tinned products, I do it to decant my oil from a 4 litre tin to my glass bottles as well.

    • @lilliputlittle
      @lilliputlittle Год назад

      That is how I was taught. The concept isn't any different that the large jugs of drinking water with the dispenser built in. It require a person to poke a hole on the top to get rid of any vacuum pressure.

    • @peabody1976
      @peabody1976 Год назад +2

      The entire island of Jamaica knows this trick too. Source: my family doing this for decades in the US/Canada/Jamaica. :)

  • @sophdog2564
    @sophdog2564 6 месяцев назад

    You have me chuckling at just a minute in with the food coloring line! I actually tried to make Thai tea once with a very nice black tea that I was gifted. I looked up a recipe and got all the other spices that are supposed to go into it and a nice sugar at a local Asian supermarket. They have Thai tea mixes, but I really wanted to try making it with the black tea I had.
    It was really good, but not exactly like how it tasted from restaurants. I was wondering about the color, but you've solved that mystery for me!
    Edit: this is so interesting. I never thought it was as simple as just vanilla flavoring. When I made mine with the leaves and the spices it was stuff like anise, cardamom and cloves.
    I'm excited to try making this again!

  • @darvoid66
    @darvoid66 6 месяцев назад +15

    So, food coloring and fake vanilla is the secret? Interesting. I usually make a giant pot of lightly sweetened black tea (one cup of turbinado sugar to 1.5 gallons of water and 30 tea bags) and keep it in the fridge. When I make a glass of iced tea I add a splash of pure vanilla and half & half and squeeze a quarter of a lime into the glass. I never knew how close to Thai tea my favorite beverage was until today.

  • @רוןבלומרוזן
    @רוןבלומרוזן Год назад +1

    I am currently in Thailand and ordered thai lemon tea because of the video
    It's truely delicious

  • @seb0rn739
    @seb0rn739 Год назад +7

    One thing I learned when I was in Thailand was that Thais have absolutely no problem with artificial additives, so I already assumed that those tea drinks had them too.
    I really noticed it when I returned to Germany with a tin of Cha Tra Mue Thai tea and compared it with the Thai tea (of the same brand) that I got in Germany. It tasted completely different and didn't have nearly as much colour.

  • @laudeharo
    @laudeharo 4 месяца назад

    I’m suuuper happy to find your youtube channel. Used to work as flight attendant before the pandemic and I miss so much the thai food when travelling!
    Now that I have some holidays, I will definitely going to try your pad thai recipe and if I find the tea that you have here and I used to buy in Bangkok, I will also give it a go.
    Thank you and greetings from Spain!

  • @fnovends
    @fnovends Год назад +3

    Growing in Malaysia we use condensed milk in coffee. So delicious

    • @al201103
      @al201103 Год назад +1

      Yes! It's the same in Indonesia. Kopi susu. Insanely delicious coffee with Sumatran beans!!!

    • @mm8436
      @mm8436 Год назад

      Vietnamese ice coffee with sweet condensed milk. Delicious 😋

  • @dmmness
    @dmmness 29 дней назад

    In order to cut out some sugar from mine, I add a scoop of vanilla protein powder to mine and top it off with whipping cream instead of half & half. Super good.

  • @jot9217
    @jot9217 Год назад +3

    Love this vid! I hope you’ll cover Thai green tea some day!!

    • @AdamHotThaiKitchen
      @AdamHotThaiKitchen Год назад

      Great idea - but for now hot-thai-kitchen.com/thai-iced-coffee/#growMeSearch=tea :) Cheers! Adam

  • @mon6745
    @mon6745 Год назад

    The way the evaporated milk was opened brings back memories 😊 it is the best way to have tea

  • @al201103
    @al201103 Год назад +8

    The "real" Thai tea, that's the way I make it. Except instead of using a strainer, I make it in an espresso machine (as I saw people doing in Thailand). Works super well. Two tablespoons of tea in the basket, run the water till it starts to come out, wait 1 minute, then run the rest out (141g). Then condensed and evaporated milk. Delicious!!!

    • @DaniilMatzkuhn
      @DaniilMatzkuhn Год назад +1

      Agree. Just don't stuff too much tea into the portafilter. Otherwise the water will not flow.

    • @ryanevius
      @ryanevius Год назад +5

      Yep, this is very common in Thailand. In Europe, I've found that a cheap Moka Pot is also a good alternative, and much better than the French Press option.

  • @thefashiongoddesschannel8099
    @thefashiongoddesschannel8099 2 месяца назад

    Very nice. I love your witty humor.
    Thank you.

  • @tayntp
    @tayntp Год назад +8

    Thai (Milk)Iced Tea is great for refreshing plus some energy kick after having an exhausting day.
    While the Thai Lemon/Lime Iced Tea is BEST for a refreshment during hot weather/summer time relax, which is also a good option to wake you up from afternoon sleepiness, too.
    Both are so enjoyable.

  • @Peguerolucy24
    @Peguerolucy24 6 месяцев назад

    Omg! Thank you so much for all those details that I didn’t even know. I love the fact that she explains everything so clearly and fast 👌☺️🙏

  • @CelticBotansDigitalArt
    @CelticBotansDigitalArt Год назад +3

    I love how pretty and yummy it looks! Also pretty fascinating to learn about other cultures through recipes like this. Greetings from Brazil!

  • @yinyinminimalist
    @yinyinminimalist 7 месяцев назад

    I watch your videos not only to learn cooking but also to see your positive vibe and the big smile.

  • @yelling3874
    @yelling3874 Год назад +76

    I was once in a fancy restaurant that had really, really good unsweet iced tea, it definitely wasn't a Thai tea but it tasted like it had some of the same flavors. I was loving it and wanted to find out what it was but the waiter insisted it was just plain Lipton. You mean to tell me those clowns were probably just adding a little fake vanilla flavor 😂 thanks for doing an in-depth video on this!!! I love Thai tea so even if my try at the fancy guys tea doesn't work out, this is such a useful video for me

    • @moksolees6658
      @moksolees6658 Год назад +8

      I took my internship as a server in a casual restaurant, we offered "Thai Iced-tea" in our menu and let me tell you. Our chef was laughing so hard at me when I learned that he only uses lipton for the said tea XD

    • @RaymondCore
      @RaymondCore Год назад +7

      My friend owned a restaurant in Dallas for 23 years and he said Lipton. It still tastes different to me at his restaurant than the Lipton I made at home.

  • @pookhahare
    @pookhahare Год назад

    My southern states aunt and uncle always used evaporated milk for coffee and hot tea.

  • @erdyantodwinugrohozheng
    @erdyantodwinugrohozheng Год назад +6

    Hello, Pailin. I'm a big fan of Thai Tea. So, Thai Tea is popular in Indonesia recently and many street vendors sell Thai Tea in the specialized stores. The problem is even though most are selling in a Thai style, not North American style because we don't have Half and Half in Indonesia, for milk, they use either 2 dairy products (evaporated milk and condensed milk) or even condensed milk (I assumed that some vendors use condensed milk because they cut the cost for making more affordable). So, that's my explanation......

    • @AndreaszTP
      @AndreaszTP Год назад +1

      True, but sad thing in Indonesia is that the majority of brands of evaporated milk are not even "real" evaporated milk, they only use some milk powder and most of the fat comes from added vegetable oil (some even use palm oil). So we don't exactly have that same dairy richness for our thai tea.

    • @oxoelfoxo
      @oxoelfoxo Год назад +1

      how is that a problem? it's the same thing as what you would get in Thailand so you can say it's more authentic even

  • @동해바다-s4f
    @동해바다-s4f Год назад +1

    this! clip! is just what i want!!
    i went thailand 2 weeks ago.. i bought only 1pkg of tea... and i already ate them all... 😢😢!! thank you for the information! ❤

  • @okiebasil
    @okiebasil Год назад +15

    I've only had the genuine Thai style, both at home and local Vietnamese and Thai restaurants. It's one of my favorite drinks, but I'll definitely try the lime version.

  • @aspcia
    @aspcia Год назад +1

    When I had my coffee cart, my tea base was just from the Thai tea leaf mix, and condensed milk. I'll have to try this!

  • @chieule7540
    @chieule7540 Год назад +11

    I would love to see your recipe for Thai coffee. I'm not sure if it's a real and specific drink for Thai people or a made up drink in some Thai-American restaurants but I like it.

  • @katharina...
    @katharina... 6 месяцев назад

    I wish I saw you add salt to your tea 30 minutes ago, when I was making my breakfast tea. I'd never heard of this concept, but I love the idea! I'll just have to wait till tomorrow to try it out ☺️

  • @misterpillows2800
    @misterpillows2800 Год назад +5

    Another Thai drink I really like is lemongrass tea! I can't seem to recreate it at home though 🤔

    • @AdamHotThaiKitchen
      @AdamHotThaiKitchen Год назад +2

      hot-thai-kitchen.com/thai-iced-coffee/#growMeSearch=tea Cheers! Adam

    • @sayajinmamuang
      @sayajinmamuang Год назад +3

      Oooo mines also. Very refreshing when chilled. Just find a bunch of lemon grass stalks at an asia or Hispanic market. Chop the stalks in 3 parts crush with a mortar and pestle. boil them for like 10 to 15 min or until the color changes to a dark greenish/yellow color. Let it sit to cool and serve with ice. I used to also make hibiscus iced drink which is also very good and refreshing. people in thailand also drink this but its not available in thai restaurants and not many supermarkets sell the dry leafs.

  • @-grey
    @-grey Год назад +1

    After a bunch of very average nobicha red teas in Bangkok I had a red tea with no milk from a lady with a street vending truck and it was amazing. I think she used coco palm suger too.

  • @onurhancakmakoglu175
    @onurhancakmakoglu175 Год назад +166

    The ice must be bough from 7/11, otherwise it is still fake 😅

    • @abmong
      @abmong Год назад +40

      The real authentic one is from a street cart served no cup in a plastic bag.

    • @franziskathiel4669
      @franziskathiel4669 Год назад +6

      That is oddly spezific Thank you 😂

    • @Sugarlydeliciousness
      @Sugarlydeliciousness Год назад +7

      @@abmong😂 righty there.

    • @abmong
      @abmong Год назад +18

      @@franziskathiel4669 How it was done when I was growing up in the 80s before 7/11 was a thing in Thailand. Drinks sellers would pack a plastic bag with ice and pour drinks into it, and if the bad didn't already have handles, the seller would tie it off with a rubber band to make a handle leaving a small hole for a straw. Better than a cup imo, you got a drinks bag you can carry with one finger, or even handsfree and hang it up almost anywhere. Drinks carts still do that, though it's rarer to see in Bangkok these days.

    • @michaelsouther7308
      @michaelsouther7308 Год назад

      7/11 in Bankok

  • @squashn.695
    @squashn.695 Год назад +1

    I got Chatramue to make thai milk tea, but it's a lot and I was getting tired of the dairy/cream. Ironically this video introduced me to the lime iced tea and I went to check your other video. Thank you so much! The lime iced tea is so refreshing!

  • @thegrinch0614
    @thegrinch0614 Год назад +16

    I just finished making my first glass of cha yen 😋 it came out wayyy better than when I order it at our local Thai restaurant! Thank you Pai 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽

  • @eswing2153
    @eswing2153 8 месяцев назад

    So cute how excited you got when you made it.

  • @mollyt6835
    @mollyt6835 Год назад +6

    I make Thai iced tea all the time in my french press. My vegan version uses condensed oat milk, and instead of the evaporated milk, I use aroy-d coconut milk, or ripple half and half. So good 😋.

    • @rhiannonrecommends
      @rhiannonrecommends Год назад +1

      At my local Asian grocery store they sell a coconut evaporated milk! Its by the brand chaokoh and its bombbbb

    • @asianreichtzu
      @asianreichtzu Год назад +1

      Oooohhh I’ll try your vegan recipe even if I like the traditional one. My tummy just cannot take it anymore 😂

    • @mollyt6835
      @mollyt6835 Год назад

      @@rhiannonrecommends I’ll have to keep my eye out for that

  • @krys1075
    @krys1075 8 месяцев назад

    I’ve always made the second version in large batches at the boba shop I worked at for years. Very coooool to be educated in seeing it made Thai version wow thank you for this informative video

  • @PaigeDWinter
    @PaigeDWinter Год назад +2

    There used to be this really amazing Thai restaurant in Long Beach, CA when I lived there. They made their own cold tea, and it was authentic. Mostly. The only difference is that they added a bit of red tea to the black.
    These days I don't get out much so I cheat, I have the instant powder mix delivered 🤣

  • @tiffaniethornton9187
    @tiffaniethornton9187 Месяц назад

    I just made this today and it was delicious. I used condensed milk and heavy cream.

  • @katiekawaii
    @katiekawaii Год назад +2

    Show us the lime version too! I've literally never seen it before and it sounds really good.

  • @TheWildchild612
    @TheWildchild612 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing this. We did it with condensed milk and then top it off with half and half. I''ll have to try the evaporated milk.

  • @samsr2887
    @samsr2887 Год назад +2

    i'm kind of surprised there aren't any spices in it. so it's essentially a vanilla milk tea, but with shelf stable milk products

  • @rubiks6
    @rubiks6 5 месяцев назад

    I just discovered Thai tea about three weeks ago. I’m addicted. I think it’s a new fad in my area. So many restaurants are suddenly offering it. Now with your very deep dive into Thai tea, I will know what I am getting. I will try different restaurants and discreetly ask questions and I will discover who is making a version the most to my liking.
    Thanks for another great video, Pailin!

  • @nickm.5931
    @nickm.5931 Год назад +9

    A couple tips I have for anyone (as someone who drinks milk tea & thai tea frequently, lol):
    1. If you're making yourself a 8-12 oz thai tea at home, the best dairy (to me) is a 2-6 tablespoons combination of whole milk and half and half. (Whole milk is the best dairy for basic milk tea, IMO.) The best amount to add, I think, is 3 tablespoons whole milk, and 1 tablespoon half and half. But you can do 4-6 tablespoons just whole milk, 2-3 tablespoons just half and half, or 4 tablespoons whole milk plus 2 tablespoons half and half. (Edit - a side note I wanted to mention - Half and half is more often closer to 13-15% milk fat, and can be anywhere from 10-18% milk fat... "half and half" is technically supposed to be half whole milk (4% fat) and half heavy cream (30-35% fat).)
    2. An easy way to make thai tea (the tea itself) here in the US (like from shopping at a Walmart), is to make your tea half cheap black tea bags (like red rose, tetley, or my favorite is Luzianne), plus half "Wangderm Authentic Thai Tea" bags (like I said, something you can find at Walmart). That brand of Thai Tea is not as cheap as a large bag (like what I usually buy that's Thai is by "Pantai," a popular Thai brand, something you can order online), and it also seems to have more of that "thai tea" unique flavor, and less of the actual tea/black tea flavor. So, if you do what I recommend and make it half cheap black tea and half that Wangderm brand, it tastes like standard thai tea (better than that Wangderm tea alone, anyways)!

  • @JediCoati
    @JediCoati 3 месяца назад

    Pantai was the brand I was able to get a hold of at my local Asian grocer and oat milk "half and half" is what I had in the fridge. Used a mix of white granulated and maple syrup as the sweeteners, and also found pantai lacked vanilla so I added a tiny amount of trader Joe's vanilla bean paste. Totally hit the spot - thanks for providing the ratios and method to get me started! (The salt tip is genius!)

  • @RickHazle
    @RickHazle Год назад +3

    While I am not crazy about Iced Tea in general, on a hot day it is refreshing. Once when I was in a coffee shop in Bangkok, I was chatting with a Thai man sitting next to me. He worked at a nearby restaurant. A tray full of Thai Iced Teas went past us headed for a table of tourists. The Thai man casually said, "Only tourists order Thai Iced Tea. I don't know any Thai people who drink it." I had to laugh. To be honest, I have never seen any of my American-Thai friends drink it. Was he just really not a fan of Thai Tea or is there something to his remark?

    • @adamthehtkminion6750
      @adamthehtkminion6750 Год назад +1

      Hi Adam here - and good question! If you want to ask her that one directly though rather that put it out to the community (as she doesn't see the comments on here once the post is more than a week old as per her note above), you can check out all the options to get hold of her at hot-thai-kitchen.com/contact . (That said, maybe he means lime tea is more popular with Thais?) Cheers!

  • @cjinasia9266
    @cjinasia9266 Год назад +1

    Cha Manao rules. Super refreshing on warm days. It ia almost as good as the coconut milkshakes.
    Thailand is obsessed with fancy coffee drinks and bubble tea. There are coffee shops everywhere, frequently little outdoor stands.

  • @nickm.5931
    @nickm.5931 Год назад +7

    It's not just food coloring, artificial vanilla, and a hint of sugar that make Thai Tea different. It also includes a bit of star anise, cardamom, and maybe a few other spices (though a small amount)...

    • @ps1251
      @ps1251 Год назад +7

      As a native thai, i’d say we are too lazy to put those herbs in Thai tea. As Pai said, it’s not a gourmet thing, just simply a beverage to cure our thirstiness.

    • @530mnorman
      @530mnorman Год назад

      Yes. I was hoping Pailin might comment on this too. I've traveled several times in Thailand and all the times I got an iced milk tea such as this, I never noticed spices. However, some restaurants in America seem to add spices to the tea to make it fancy. Very possible I just didn't try enough places in Thailand and that spices are common there, but I also wonder if the restaurants outside Thailand are just trying to make it for customers who are expecting something more exotic. @@ps1251

    • @nickm.5931
      @nickm.5931 Год назад +3

      @@ps1251 I wasn't saying people actually add those spices themselves, I'm saying the large bags of Thai Tea mix have those spices mixed in already. Some packages even specify that

    • @mediocreaaliasa501
      @mediocreaaliasa501 Год назад +1

      YT won't let me delete this comment.

  • @louel9272
    @louel9272 6 месяцев назад

    I usually add full cream milk and winter melon concentrate to the black tea.
    My family loves Thai food! Cheers from the 🇵🇭

  • @giftbox-e
    @giftbox-e 7 месяцев назад +4

    Well, most people never had anything real. But what is...real...?

    • @ghostoflazlo
      @ghostoflazlo 6 месяцев назад

      Ok, "original" then if you wanna debate sematics

  • @wesfin
    @wesfin 3 месяца назад

    4:08. evaporated milk poured on top for layer, sweet/condensed milk mixed with tea for sweetness

  • @catlitterbox1
    @catlitterbox1 Год назад +2

    One of my Thai tea hacks which I call it “Thai Tea Float”
    Just make ur Thai tea plain but for the dairy add a scoop of vanilla ice cream. It’s not that bad.

  • @KATHYHANG-to4gx
    @KATHYHANG-to4gx 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much. The evaporated milk taste so much better then half and half. I love it ❤

  • @sal3060
    @sal3060 Год назад

    Many US dairy processing plants are now using ultra high temp pasteurization for their half and half. This gives the product, conservatively, a 30-45 day lifespan in the fridge.

  • @wasanay.497
    @wasanay.497 Год назад

    เป็นความรู้มากเลยค่ะ ดื่มชานมมาทั้งชีวิตไม่เคยเอ๊ะใจเลยว่ามันคือ Black tea ผสมวานิลลาและสีผสมอาหาร ขอบคุณนะคะ